Nuclear mattersGermany to extend life of nuclear reactors

Germany said on Monday that it would extend the life of the country’s 17 nuclear reactors by twelve years on average — the lives of older plants will be extended by eight years and those of newer ones by fourteen years; Chancellor Angela Merkel’s predecessor Gerhard Schroeder had decided to mothball the reactors by around 2020, but Merkel said the extension was necessary to allow more time for renewable energy to become cost effective

Nuclear power plant at Karlsruhle, Germany // Source: topnews.in

Germany said on Monday that it would extend the life of its nuclear reactors by twelve years on average after marathon talks on the controversial issue that will shape the energy policy of Europe’s top economy.

The decision came after twelve hours of talks between senior politicians and means that some of the seventeen plants will now be operational until the 2030s. The lives of older plants will be extended by eight years and those of newer ones by fourteen years, Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen said.

He said nuclear utilities would have to pay part of their extra profits boosted from the extension to develop renewable energy.

Euronews reports that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s predecessor Gerhard Schroeder had decided to mothball the reactors by around 2020. Merkel, however, wanted to postpone the shutdown as part of a new “energy concept” for the country due to go before her cabinet on 28 September. “We have together found a way to take Germany forward,” said Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle.

The decision was criticized by Greenpeace and other environmental groups as well as Germany’s Green Party.

Also, Austria’s environment minister Niki Berlakovich termed it a “hard blow for the… development of renewable energy…. The future of energy supplies lies indisputably in renewable energy,” he said. “In any case, nuclear energy will not answer the problems related to climate or be a solution to reducing CO2 emissions.”

Merkel calls the extension a “bridge” until renewable sources of energy such as wind and solar power can produce more of Germany’s power as it seeks to reduce dependence on coal.

A debate has raged in the country and in government over how long to extend the life of the reactors and what price to exact from the energy industry, which stands to benefit from the move.

Support for Merkel’s coalition has tumbled in recent opinion polls and surveys suggested a majority of Germans opposed the idea of postponing the date that the country goes nuclear-free.

The chancellor, a former environment minister herself, had earlier hinted that her preference was for an extension of 10-15 years, saying this is what is “technically reasonable.”

Not everyone in her squabbling coalition agreed. A government-commissioned report last month was meant to bring clarity but with so many variables, not least predicting future electricity and oil prices and demographics, it ended up highly inconclusive.

It did, however, outline how high the stakes are. Without nuclear power, the report said, Germany could forget about its target of reducing CO2 emissions by 80 percent in 2050 from 1990 levels.

Environmental pressure group Greenpeace heaped scorn on the report and accused Merkel of yielding to the powerful nuclear energy lobby, a charge echoed by an increasingly confident opposition. “Ten or 15 years’ extension. That sounds harmless, but it’s not,” said Tobias Riedl, Greenpeace’s nuclear energy expert, on Friday.

Another item in the mix is the debate over how to make energy companies such as RWE, Vattenfall, and E.ON pay for the extension of their plants and ensure a greater contribution to Germany’s energy output from renewable sources.

As part of an €80-billion austerity program for the period 2011 to 2014, Berlin wanted to tap energy firms, a quid pro quo for keeping their plants open for longer.

The utility companies, however, are putting all their considerable lobbying powers into resisting such a levy and the nuclear tax was not in the austerity package the cabinet approved Wednesday.

Merkel has a tricky challenge on her hands, as she needs to ensure any draft law would not be subject to approval in the Bundesrat upper house, where she lost her majority earlier this year.